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Book Reviews - Romance, Fantasy, Science Fiction - By an Adult for Adults

Aliens and Zombies! The Spaceship Next Door – Science Fiction Gene Doucette

July 6, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Do you expect to read about the zombie apocalypse when you start a science fiction story.  No?  Me neither.  Nor do I expect to see alien spacecraft left parked in a small town doing nothing, nor a 16 year old girl main character who doesn’t fall in love nor a town where the factory owner rebuilds the factory after a fire instead of shipping everything off to China.  Gene Doucette’s The Spaceship Next Door is original, interesting and fun and even the zombies are believable.

The plot revolves around the spaceship that landed in Sorrow Falls, rural northwestern Massachusetts 3 years ago and since then has done…nothing.  At least nothing that anyone can see.  There is a full contingent of UFO tin hat types, all camped across the road, all with homemade instruments looking for radiation? color? sound? anything?  And more to the point, an army base with plenty of real instruments that feed data to a board of Nobel prize-winning scientists all looking and waiting for the ship to do…something.

Characters

Annie is 16, pretty used to taking care of herself because her father’s gone all the time and her mother has cancer and can’t handle normal parent/adult responsibilities.  Annie is extraordinarily outgoing and friendly and knows just about everybody in town.  She works part time at the local diner/conversation hub and the library and visits the tin hat camper contingent every day and she’s smart, a little bit like Anne of Green Gables.

Annie is the only character that Doucette develops thoroughly, and through her we meet Ed, the government agent who investigates an anomaly from the spaceship, plus Violet, Doug, Rick and four of the nutty campers.

Ed is a bit of a cipher.  He is responsible, warm and friendly to Annie, in fact he agrees to act as her guardian while her mom is hospitalized out of town.  Yet he is also the author of the plan to bomb the town with nuclear weapons if necessary.  It felt to me as if he wore his analyst hat at work and didn’t think about what it was he was analyzing, that it was people.

Annie’s best friend Violet is a placeholder with little personality, in fact it’s a running joke with Annie and Violet that no one remembers Violet after meeting her.  Of course there is a reason for that!

No Romance

It was so refreshing to read a novel featuring a 16 year old girl who did not have a romance with a vampire/werewolf/demigod/demon/alien/super hero or even with a normal guy.  Annie likes guys just fine and she’s attracted to Sam, an army corporal, and good friends with her neighbor Doug.

Pacing and Ending

Several reviewers on Amazon felt The Spaceship Next Door was slow, but I didn’t feel that.  The plot takes a while to kick off while we get to know Annie and meet the camper folks, her friends, Ed and the army guys.  This is not a high octane action story.

The ending was a bit unsatisfying.  We don’t know what comes next with the aliens, the spaceship or the ex-zombies.  We get hints that Annie will go blithely on to her future but that doesn’t seem likely given she got the brain dump from a multi-zillion year old alien.  We get the obligatory threats from an evil government guy but Annie doesn’t waste time feeling threatened.

YA or Adult?

Despite Annie’s age The Spaceship Next Door is not listed as nor marketed as YA fiction (maybe because there are no nonsense love stories with vampires or demons).  Teens would like it but the book is primarily an adult, straightforward science fiction story about first contact with a twist.

Summary

The Spaceship Next Door was a happy find.  I was glad to have it on my Nook list and glad I read it.  It is not so compelling to warrant 5 stars, but an excellent read, most enjoyable.

4 Stars

Filed Under: Space and Aliens Tagged With: Book Review, Science Fiction

The Pursuit Of Happiness By Hook Or Crook – Dark Matter By Blake Crouch

June 30, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Dark Matter by Blake Crouch adds a new twist to the alternate timelines / alternate lives sub genre.  Jason teaches physics at university having given up a promising research career to marry Daniela when she became pregnant with their son Charlie.  Daniela traded an art career to be mother and teach private art classes.

Jason sometimes wonders what it would have been like to have walked away from Daniela to concentrate on his research career but decides over and over that he has the best life he could and his family happiness is far better than a sterile life alone.

One evening he gets the opportunity to be certain when a stranger abducts him, drugs him and tosses him into another world where he finds his family doesn’t exist and that his earlier, tentative forays turned into successful research.  The rest of the novel is Jason’s search for a way back home to his Daniela and his Charlie.

Hearth and Heart

Have you ever longed to be home, even when you are physically at home?  It’s part of being human, a powerful longing for home, our real home.  Jason is truly cast adrift in Dark Matter.  The others in his alter ego’s company spot him for a ringer and hunt him; he has no anchor in this new world; Daniela remembers him as a short term lover and Charlie doesn’t exist.

Dark Matter asks what we would give for home.  Will we give a career?  Success?  Fame and money?  Our family?  As Jason stumbles from world to world, some incredibly hostile wastelands and other so very close to his, he discerns what is truly home:  For Jason it is his family.  His specific family, not other Danielas and Charlies that are close but not his.

Who Am I?

Jason’s trip through the quantum point cause him to split into multiples, all of whom are driven to home.  I thought this part of the novel was weak.  Why wouldn’t those multiples collapse into one or a few instead of splintering into 50 or 500?  If their only differences were a few minutes spent in one alternate world vs. another, they why would some be so very different that they would be willing to kill?

Dark Matter didn’t spend much time on this question.  The Jason point-of-view character knew who he was and knew himself well enough to realize the other Jasons would never rest until they too had their real family back.

Unanswered Questions

Dark Matter is first and last a novel about people, about the longing for home and family that makes us individuals.  It isn’t meant to be a physics text, which is good because the quantum box mechanism doesn’t make a lot of sense.  (Physics class was long long ago but even had it been yesterday I don’t think the quantum box was meant to be more than a plot device.)

If the first quantum travelers had simply sat still, why wouldn’t they have returned to their home world?

Leighton in the alternate world is ruthless, but is he ruthless enough to kill his world’s Daniela or the biochemist who developed the serum to enable world hopping?

POV Jason has difficulty finding his true home yet his doppelganger Jason had no problem whatsoever sending POV Jason to doppelganger’s world.  Since the traveler chooses the destination it seemed improbable that doppelganger could simply toss Jason into the box and have it work out.

I had a hard time believing the flood of Jasons into the real world.  It didn’t make a ton of sense to me but was a needed plot point.

Summary

You’ll see these questions don’t particularly detract from the story of the search for happiness, hearth and home.  They are small annoyances to an otherwise engaging book.

I’m giving Dark Matter 4 stars and not 5.  It was interesting, easy to follow, a fast read and I didn’t have any problem sticking with it.  It was good.

Filed Under: Alternate History Tagged With: Book Review, Fantasy

Wheat That Springeth Green by J F Powers – A Priest’s Life and Growth

June 26, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I read Wheat That Springeth Green by J F Powers several years ago and the characters stuck in my mind like a song that you hear every now and then and each time stop to listen.

The novel follows Joe Hackett through his youthful sympathy for older priest Father Day, to his teenaged sexual encounters with the girl and maid next door (complete with syphilis) through the seminary with his pig-headed pursuit of his image of God, to his work as the Catholic pastor in Ingenook.

Along the way Joe struggles to live a life of virtue, to help others reach sanctity, to be a good man and a good priest.  He tries a hair shirt and hours on his knees in the seminary but is never able to achieve the immediate and obvious union with God that he seeks.  He fights disillusionment and an ever-growing beer belly, parishioners’ stinginess and the constant battle between holiness and worldliness.

Writing Style

J. F. Powers combined stream-of-conscious with modest narrative, all from Joe’s point of view, and abrupt changes of scenery and time.  The book would be a little easier to follow with a bit more narrative.  For example, Joe finally gets assigned as a pastor to his own parish, but we have to surmise that by the change in tone and topic in a new chapter.

The stream-of-conscious thoughts are Joe wrestling with a problem, neatly listing the pros and cons, and sometimes the dialogue he wants to have but cannot.  The archbishop increases the assessment against his parish, but Joe feels bound to not make money requests to his parish.  He implemented a flat fee concept with the promise that he wouldn’t ask for extra funds.

Joe imagines discussing this with the Arch, all with a happy ending.  Instead he and his assistant divide up the DPs (deliquent parishioners who don’t give) and visit some each evening to ask the families to live up to their stewardship responsibilities.  (We can imagine how well that works.  On average in any parish a third give regularly, a third give once in a while and a third never give.)

Characters

Joe is inherently kind and thoughtful, not what one would expect reading his famous question posed in seminary “How do we make virtue as attractive as sex?”  As a boy Joe sees his pastor, “Dollar Bill” treat his assistant Father Day rudely and be greedy with his parish.  As an adult Joe seeks out Father Day, makes him his confessor, treats him kindly and with great respect.

The most striking example was with Catfish Tooney, sorry, Monsignor Tooney, Joe’s former classmate and general pain in the neck in the diocesan chancery.  Joe built a nice rectory in his parish and wants the archbishop to bless it, but must go through Tooney who of course says no.  Later the archbishop asks Joe in person why he hasn’t had him out to bless the rectory and Joe bites his tongue and struggles for days to find a way to answer without calling out Tooney.  Most of us wouldn’t bother protecting a guy who’s been a jerk for years.

Humor with Seriousness

Wheat that Springeth Green is funny even while treating serious topics like God, faith, virtue, money, sex and dreams.  Joe has a good sense of humor and Powers does a good job showing us the funny moments, both inside and outside of Joe’s head.  We see Joe evolve from a precocious youngster to an obnoxiously self-important seminarian to an earnest priest dedicated to his own holiness and hopefully that of the people he serves, to a priest who compromises with the world to one who re-ignites his own faith.  Along the way we smile and maybe even laugh a bit at life.

Filed Under: Families Tagged With: Book Review, Contemporary, Not Fantasy or Science Fiction

Dear Committee Members – Life Via Letters of Recommendation By Julie Schumacher

June 14, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Have you ever asked someone to write a letter of recommendation?  Maybe a favorite teacher or neighbor when you wanted a job or a scholarship?  Have you ever wondered just what they said about you?

Wonder no more.  Instead read Dear Committee Members by Julie Schumacher.  The author tells the story of Jay Fitger, Professor of English at a small college in his own words, via letters of recommendation, complaints to the HR department, emails to his ex-wife and ex-girlfriend, letters to friends.

Professor Fitger has much to complain about.  His English department faces severe budget cuts, whacking the English graduate program, living in 3rd rate offices, with a department head borrowed from Sociology.  Fitger wants his current students to survive and thrive and worries about one in particular, Darren Browles.

Mr. Browles wrote a novel, or at least part of a novel, we aren’t really sure.  Although Browles never appears in the book, Fitger writes letter after letter – to his former friends, his ex-wife, his publisher, his agent – in short anyone he can think of who might bring this pseudo-masterpiece to print, or if nothing else, provide Browles with a few bucks.

Meanwhile Fitger’s other students are moving into corporate jobs or temporary work at liquor stores and trailer parks, going on to grad school, selling novels.  We see them all.  Only Browles remains, left behind, unwanted.

 

Characterization

Professor Fitger is the star of course and we learn much about him.  He’s in his mid/late 40s, balding, a bit fussy, a bit bitter, sarcastic, with distant memories of being just a bit more radical, a bit more successful.  He’s also lonely and prone to sabotage himself and any relationships.

He writes his letters with as much honesty and kindness as the student deserves.  One girl was desperate for a letter and her advisor was gone so she turned to Fitger whom she had seen around campus – after all he was in the building and almost no one else was.  Fitger wrote a charming letter, praising the student’s enterprise and determination while accurately describing how he was roped into writing the recommendation.

The book is full of funny comments like these, interspersed with heartfelt pleas to help Browles and to his ex-wife and girlfriend to please like him again.  We don’t see Fitger in his home, only his office, while he reminiscenses about his mistakes, how he included too much reality in his one successful novel, so much that his wife could not tell what parts were fiction and dumped him.  He remains on good terms with people right until he can’t help but do something to sabotage the friendship, for example, copying the entire university staff on an email to his girlfriend.

The setting is mostly inside Fitger’s mind with sharp descriptions of the falling-down academic building with its non-working plumbing.  We get a glimpse of cutthroat academic life where all new hires are non-tenure track adjuncts who live on air, pennies and dreams.  Fitger remembers it didn’t use to be like that and it drives him to write scathing letters to the dean.

I think I would like Fitger in small doses, preferably with a glass of wine.

Summary

Dear Committee Members is funny, poignant.  I recommend it to you without reservation!

5 Stars

Filed Under: Families Tagged With: Book Review, Not Fantasy or Science Fiction

Beware Malls Overrun with Demons! Long Hot Summoning by Tanya Huff

June 3, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Long Hot Summoning: The Keeper’s Chronicles #3 is the third book in Tanya Huff’s fun Keepers series set in Ontario, Canada.  The back story is that a few people, called Keepers, patrol the world and keep it safe from otherworld, aka demon incursions.  Claire with her cat Austin saved the world in the first book and now younger sister Diana has graduated from high school and ready to take on the Keeper role with her cat Sam.

The Long Hot Summoning has much of the fun that Summon the Keeper had and second book in the series, The Second Summoning, just misses.  Diana answers the summons to a mall in Kingston where the evil powers are trying to overlay their hellish mall onto the real one.  Unfortunately they are very close and sister Claire is a bit distracted trying to save Dean and his hotel guests from a mummy who is sucking their lives to power her own.  Diana gets help from mall elves, a magic mirror and a pink plastic magic wand.

The plot is fun, with multiple subplots that do not distract from the main story.  Can Diana save the mall kids, Arthur (yes, that Arthur), Claire, the cats and herself?  Can she shut down the hellish segue into our world?  Will Osiris weigh Claire’s heart and find it heavier than the feather and doom her?  Will Lance shut down mummy Meryat?  Can she save the magic mirror Jack?

Claire’s, Lance’s and Austin’s characters are well done, although Diana’s and the minor ones are a bit fla, although even the less well-developed people are funny and you can imagine meeting them.  Diana grows up a bit, begins to accept The Rules, although she still wants to bend them every which way.  Of course any book where the cats are intelligent (as we know they are) and play major roles in saving the Earth has got to be good!

Overall I recommend The Long Hot Summoning and the first book, Summon the Keeper if you enjoy fantasy with a bit of a bite and strong characters, humor and good writing.  This is a fast read, perfect for a late evening or take it to the porch this summer and enjoy!

4 Stars for The Long Hot Summoning and Summon the Keeper gets 5 stars.

Filed Under: Urban / Modern Fantasy Tagged With: Book Review, Contemporary, Fantasy

Seven Forges by James A. Moore – Set Up for Sequels – Fantasy Review

June 1, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Seven Forges by James A. Moore is set up for an ongoing series, with the author showing us two cultures so different that one will be an existential threat to the other, and cast of traditional characters for this sword and sorcery fantasy novel.

Plot

Seven Forges starts with a bang.  Merros Dulver, retired from the Emperor’s army, leads an expedition to the freezing Blasted Lands, looking for any traces of the people who once inhabited the area before it was devastated by a mage war.  He and his band are fighting for their lives against Pra-Moresh, huge predators of the icy waste, when Drask, from the Sa’ba Taalor people, intervenes and kills the remaining monsters.

The plot thins after this, with isolated incidents that don’t flow together and no overarching conflict in the story telling sense.  The author sets up a major conflict that kicks off at the end of the novel, but dribbles out little fights that don’t tie together before that.

The expedition travels first to Drask’s land of the Seven Forges, then takes Drask and about 40 others of the Sa’ba Taalor back to the capital of the Empire to meet Emperor Pathra.  This begins the completely misunderstood engagement between the two peoples that is doomed to end in war.

Unfortunately the book falls flat at the point where Dulver and crew reach the Seven Forges.  Drask tells them that each Sa’ba Taalor does everything for themselves – crafts their own weapons, grows their own food, fights their own battles – and gives evidence that each adult is extremely capable with weapons and that every dispute is solved with combat.  The Sa’ba Taalor have gods that direct their actions and requires each to be self-sufficient.  Somehow Dulver doesn’t catch what this means.

The emperor, his wizard advisor Desh and Dulver all see the Sa’ba Taalor visitors as an embassy, a meeting designed to bring long term trade and good will.  They don’t realize that a people who sees everything as directed by their gods and to be resolved via violence will see the Empire as soft, as incapable, as undeserving.

The emperor agrees to let 10 of the Sa’ba Taalor go to Roathes, the southern country in the empire that is being invaded slowly by the neighboring Guntha.  The emperor believes the Sa’ba Taalor are there to scout the problem, confirm the situation.  The Sa’ba Taalor are there to “take care of the problem”, which in their lexicon means kill every Guntha on the shore.  Which they do.

At this point the wizard and Dulver wise up and realize they do not have compatible goals or understanding, that the Sa’ba Taalor do not value what the empire values.  And both get a bit suspicious and worried about their intentions.

Backstory and World Building

When I read fantasy novels I look for engaging characters, interesting backstory with tantalizing glimpses of what might be there, fun and fast moving plots, reasonable world building.  Seven Forges by James Moore has a good backstory but it falls flat.

First the idea that everyone is self-sufficient for food, for defense, for weapons crafting is intriguing but I kept wondering just how far that self-sufficiency extended.  Did each person mine their own ore and smelt it?  Did each one build their own house, weave their own cloth, tan their own leather?  We could see some cooperation among the Sa’ba Taalor who traveled to the empire, but where did they draw the line?

The fact that every one who wants something builds it themselves, yet that every dispute and every issue is solved by physical combat seems paradoxical.  In our world when violence is the only rule the weak are impoverished and we end up with warlords or gang leaders.

The Sa’ba Taalor demanded that the empire’s assigned ambassador, Andover, demonstrate his martial competence and stated that the Sa’ba Taalor would only respect him – and by extension everyone else – if he could hold his own with weapons.  The empire valued other things – the rule of law, the ability to solve problems with words and trade, commerce, art and music.   The Sa’ba Taalor see no reason to demonstrate their skills in the empire’s valued abilities, in fact it never seems to occur to anyone to show reciprocity.

Characters

The characters likewise lost their interest about a third of the way through.  I liked Desh the wizard and the emperor Pathra and Dulver was OK if two-dimensional.  The Sa’ba Taalor were boring.  You could substitute any generic bad guy/violent culture; the extreme self-sufficiency was the only novel point and as mentioned it didn’t make a lot of sense.

The character I like least is Andover whom the emperor appoints as ambassador to the Sa’ba Taalor.  This makes no sense.  Andover is nearly illiterate, about 18, unskilled, young, dumb, venal and gullible. Most emperors would appoint someone who knows something about the empire or its trade and can represent the emperor’s wishes.  The Sa’ba Taalor tell the emperor that their gods have chosen Andover, but why and why should that matter for something as important as the first ambassador to a neighbor.

Summary

Author Moore must have meant this as the set up for a series as we finally get to the real conflict between Sa’ba Taalor and Empire only at the end of the book and the whole thing feels like a set up.   Unfortunately Moore takes almost 400 pages to set up his world and the eventual conflict and after slogging through that much I really don’t much care.

3 Stars

(Amazon shows there are at least four books in the series now.)

Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: Book Review, Fantasy, Sword and Sorcery

To Hold the Bridge – Old Kingdom Novella and More by Garth Nix

May 25, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Garth Nix published Sabriel, the first novel in his Abhorsen fantasy trilogy in 1995, ending with Abhorsen in 2003.  Since then we fans had to subsist on a novella, Nicholas Sayre and the Creature in the Case, published in Across the Wall in 2006.  The series is rich in world building, excellent characters, unusual use of fantasy themes, and quality of the writing.

To Hold the Bridge – Title Story

Nix used the same world but completely new characters in the novella To Hold the Bridge, published with other short stories in 2015.  We don’t see the royal family, Abhorsen or Clayrs.  The main character, Morghan, is a destitute orphan, bright, ambitious, tough and hard working.  He is handicapped with a bum arm but learned math, reading and some Charter magic by trading his work to an innkeeper in exchange for lessons.   The innkeeper was formerly a royal guard and thus educated and a minor Charter mage.

Morghan is taken on as an cadet in the Bridge Company, a firm that is building a great bridge that will increase trade and travel in the northern part of the Old Kingdom.  The company personnel combine engineering and magic and must be able to defend themselves against the semi-wild tribes people and Wild Magic practitioners.

Morghan worries about his future with the company, knowing he has nowhere else to go, and works hard for the Bridgemistress and his fellow engineers.  As often with Nix’s characters Morghan discovers unknown strength and character as he earns his place in the world.

This story was excellent.  It felt like a prequel to something else set in the same world but perhaps featuring regular Old Kingdom citizens.  My quibble with the novella was I wanted a map and there was none.  The newer E versions of the original Abhorsen include maps which I referred to a couple of times.

Other Stories in the Collection

A Handful of Ashes was my favorite.  It too featured young ladies coming of age, growing into their character and strength while defeating evil.

Infestation was an unusual twist on the vampire novel.  I was glad that these vamps were just plain icky, no glittering sparkling sexpots here!

An Unwelcome Guest was a funny take off on the Rapunzel story.

The other stories varied and I read two of them before.  Iron and Holly is a twist on the Saxon vs. Norman fight, and has been published elsewhere as was Old Friends.

This was categorized as YA fiction, mostly because several characters were 18 or so, just beginning their life’s path.  I’ve felt the Abhorsen books should have been categorized as adult fiction, although older teens will enjoy them too, and believe To Hold the Bridge also will appeal to adults.

Overall I recommend this collection of short stories and longer novellas.  Like all anthologies you may not like each story but will certainly enjoy some and likely find one or two that resonate in your heart.

4 Stars

 

Filed Under: Magic Tagged With: Book Review, Fantasy, YA Fantasy

Eleventh Book Is Not A Charm – Cast in Honor, Chronicles of Elantra by Michelle Sagara

May 18, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Cast in Honor is the 11th book in the Chronicles of Elantra, a series good enough that I read the first 10 books within a couple months last fall. Then a 6 month gap until now when our library could borrow Cast in Honor, published in late 2015. This review covers book 11 and the series in general.

The Good Points

Author Michelle Sagara built a wonderfully rich, complex world peopled with different types of people, all different. Two, Dragons and Barrani, are immortal, meaning they can be killed but don’t die of disease or old age. The two immortal people warred for millennia until the Dragon emperor established his rule in Elantra close to the Barrani primary place, The Halls. Dragons and Barrani buried the hatchet – more or less – but do not like or trust each other.

The elements themselves (earth, air, fire and water) have power and roles but are left rather mysterious and mystical. One of the most interesting characters is Evanton, the Keeper of the Elements. I was always glad to see Evanton with his wry sense of humor and quiet expertise.

The plot in books 2-10 move and are intriguing, although each has dull spots and times where you want to shake the main character, Kaylin and ask her to just grow up, will you?

The Weak Points

Unfortunately book 11 revisits and repeats the same problems as annoyed me in book 1 and occasionally in the other stories.

  • Too much telling and not enough showing
  • Lots and lots of thinking and not much action
  • Unclear motives and rationale
  • Plot elements that just happen and don’t seem to go anywhere
  • No character development
  • Sketchy and unexplained new characters and back stories with heavy doses of mysticism
  • Heroine Kaylin is unlikable, obtuse, defiantly and stubbornly ignorant of her magic, unwilling to learn to speak to her dragon familiar, to learn anything related to magic.  Yet she somehow manages to save the world in every book.
  • I don’t see how Sagara could build upon the new characters from Cast in Honor, and the book didn’t feel like a new story arc. Maybe it a throw away, a little lagniappe story tucked in a series where it didn’t fit.

I remember every high school English teacher telling us to show, not tell and it’s hard to do. Sagara wrote some complicated back story points that have to be told, but struggles to do so in any way other than just telling us.

We are told that Kaylin is perpetually late, has messy personal habits, is dedicated to her job as a Hawk (aka cop on the beat), fiercely loyal to her friends, not very trusting.  Sagara spends most of book 1 telling us these things. I almost tossed the first book back into the library return bag, but she had just enough hints of a real story that I read the series.

Besides the faults that Sagara tells us about, we can see that Kaylin is also rude, disrespectful, expects special treatment/is a spoiled brat, intellectually lazy and completely oriented to now, with no concern for future. Kaylin grew up hand to mouth (when lucky enough to have something in her hand to put in her mouth) so realize the spoiled brat part isn’t displayed in material ways but more in expectations as to how the world should operate and her unwillingness to learn.

Summary

Sagara’s Elantra is interesting and complex. She used the first several novels to help us understand the dynamics within the city and its history. For example, there are 5 fiefs in the center of Elantra, and I kept wondering why the all-powerful emperor didn’t just shove the fief lords out and take over. It’s not until book 3 or so that we realize the fiefs are quite different from medieval fiefs and a few books later find the fief lords are essential to maintain reality.

This is a series that you need to read in order as the plot elements and characters build upon each other book to book. You could read a couple of the earlier ones out of sequence but the last several follow one right after the other.

I almost didn’t finish the first book Cast in Shadow, but it was just that close to being good that I read on and went to the next. And the next, the next and the next, all the way through the 10th book. Now with book 11 Cast In Honor I’m back to wondering whether to bother going ahead. It just wasn’t that good.

3 Stars

Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: Book Review, Fantasy

The Butterfly Crest – Modern Fantasy – Japan, Myths and Travelogue

May 4, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I wanted to like The Butterfly Crest by Eva Vanrell.  The publisher describes a modern woman, Elena, who is caught in the endless war between pantheons.  It sounded so good and indeed the beginning was good, an auspicious sign.

Elena learns of an inheritance from her mother, who died 19 years ago, that awaits her in Japan, and travels there to retrieve whatever it may be.  She and her former guardian stay in an authentic Old Japan inn in Kyoto where they enjoy several days sightseeing with a fellow guest.  She retrieves her inheritance, a striking necklace but decides to leave it with the strange bank that her mother used.

Suddenly everything changes.  The fellow guest in one breath turns from kind friend to killer, attacking and trying to rape Elena.  She is saved by mystery man Eiry, learns she is somehow instrumental in a millennia-long civil war among pantheons and must leave everything she knows.

The Good Parts

Author Vanrell obviously knows and loves ancient Kyoto and shares her love of Japanese culture and ritual with us readers.  This got a little tedious after a while – we are reading a novel, not a travelogue – but she loves it so much that we have to share.  She did her homework on the various pantheons too, introducing all sorts of minor gods and goddesses.

The writing quality is good, albeit too much of it.  The author would have a better and more readable story with good editing and removed about 40% of the words.

The cover is beautiful, like a classic Japan scroll.

The Bad Parts

Elena didn’t seem real to me.  She is meant to be a strong female lead but she just seemed like a character, not a real person.  I didn’t like her.

The plot was contrived.  I couldn’t care less about the pantheons’ war nor about Elena’s place in the war, nor about the obvious romance.

Summary

I just didn’t like the book, couldn’t care about any of the people or their conflicts, didn’t care about the pantheons or Elena.  When the best part of a fantasy novel is the travelogue description you know it is not a book for you.

The publisher furnished a free copy via NetGalley in exchange for a review.   I always try to finish every NetGalley book, since it is a trust, but this one was a real challenge and a chore.  I skimmed the last half.  I noticed most reviewers on Amazon raved about the story and the characters (and agreed about editing the endless travelogue) so maybe it was just me.

2 Stars  (The writing quality and descriptions were too good to give it any less.)

Filed Under: Paranormal Romance Tagged With: Book Review, Fantasy, Paranormal Romance

Refreshingly Different – The Unhappy Medium – Contemporary Fantasy by T. J. Brown

May 4, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

The Unhappy Medium was a happy surprise!  While the blurb made it clear that it isn’t a typical ghost/medium/seance/haunting book, I was delighted  just how different The Unhappy Medium is. I was engaged from the get-go with the character and the setting and plot but if you don’t care for books about science in the back story this novel may not be for you.

Set in today’s England it features brilliant physicist Dr Newton Barlow as he blazes a stellar career researching nuclear fusion and a side media line debunking the supernatural.  Sadly he is less wise than smart.

Cold Fusion Anyone?

Newton first accepts post doc money from a R&D company then accepts their job offer to explore the tantalizing hints he sees of nuclear fusion from collapsing bubbles.  He’s unhappy that his employers restrict him from publishing or talking to others, but very glad of the income and research support.  At least he’s happy until the 2008 crash when the company’s investors start asking for solid results – NOW.  Newton tries to soft pedal his findings but the more he explains the more the media pushes:  Just when will we get cheap power from bubble fusion?  Next decade?  Sooner?

Poor Newton has no leg to stand on and he’s alienated so many that he has no allies.  Soon he has no job.  Then he has no wife (which is no loss whatsoever), no daughter, no house.  All he has is a tiny income, an old Citroen car and booze.

I liked this part of the story.  We got to know Newton and the box he managed to fall into.  Plus the research process is fascinating and author T. J. Brown did a great job showing us how commercial realities and science sometimes run together – and sometimes clash.

The Medium

Newton even manages to get fired from a popular (aka crank) science magazine because he’s too depressed and too upright to write garbage.  Just when he’s hit the all time low Newton learns that his old friend and fellow skeptic, Dr. Sixsmith, is terminally ill.  He rushes to the hospital but is too late.  That is, he’s too late until Dr. Sixsmith shows up in person.

Dr. Sixsmith pulls Newton into a brand new world, where he works for an ancient Greek (also dead), making sure that the bad dead guys stay dead and the good dead guys stay remembered.  Despite his skepticism Newton does excellent work and is soon dedicated to the effort.

Characters

Newton is excellent, a full person, still not terribly humble even after his drastic fall.  His girlfriend and daughter are less well drawn.  The best characters were the Greek dead guy bureaucrat, the vicar and the arch villain.   Outside of Newton the characterization was good but not great.

Humor and Plot

The Unhappy Medium is funny, full of snarky, dry humor.  Newton’s ex-wife adds a whole layer of nasty that the author manages to turn into funny.

The sinister property developers and evil arch villain are dedicated to evil, or, for the developers, to profits without consideration of any morality or social considerations.  For example their fondest wish is to raze St. Paul’s in London and build row houses.  Just listening to their spiel gives one the creeps – yet we have to smile at how deluded they are, how their dedication to money and destruction leaves them unhappy and living in a cold dump.

The arch villain isn’t funny because there are people like that, folks who are perfectly happy to kill everyone in the name of terror and control.  He’s a maniac but a scary one.

The book has some goofy theological backdrops, perfectly fine for a fantasy, but I do hope no one takes these seriously.

Overall The Unhappy Medium is a 4 star book.  If the other characters were a bit better done and the plot just a tad more focused it would be 5 stars.  I’ll look for more by author T. J. Brown.

 

Filed Under: Urban / Modern Fantasy Tagged With: Book Review, Fantasy

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